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Nawaz Sharif

Nawaz Sharif
نواز شریف
Official portrait, 2013
12th Prime Minister of Pakistan
In office
5 June 2013 – 28 July 2017
PresidentAsif Ali Zardari
Mamnoon Hussain
Preceded byMir Hazar Khan Khoso (caretaker)
Succeeded byShahid Khaqan Abbasi
In office
17 February 1997 – 12 October 1999
PresidentFarooq Leghari
Wasim Sajjad (acting)
Rafiq Tarar
Preceded byMalik Meraj Khalid (caretaker)
Succeeded byPervez Musharraf (chief executive)
In office
6 November 1990 – 18 July 1993
PresidentGhulam Ishaq Khan
Preceded byGhulam Mustafa Jatoi (Caretaker)
Succeeded byMoeenuddin Ahmad Qureshi (caretaker)
Leader of the Opposition
In office
19 October 1993 – 5 November 1996
Preceded byBenazir Bhutto
Succeeded byBenazir Bhutto
President of Pakistan Muslim League (N)
Assumed office
28 May 2024
Preceded byShehbaz Sharif
In office
27 July 2011 – 16 August 2017
Preceded byJaved Hashmi
Succeeded bySardar Yaqoob (interim)
In office
6 October 1993 – 12 October 1999
Preceded byPost created
Succeeded byKulsoom Nawaz Sharif
9th Chief Minister of Punjab
In office
9 April 1985 – 13 August 1990
GovernorGhulam Jilani Khan
Sajjad Hussain Qureshi
Tikka Khan
Preceded bySadiq Hussain Qureshi
Succeeded byGhulam Haider Wyne
Member of the National Assembly of Pakistan
Assumed office
29 February 2024
Preceded byWaheed Alam Khan
ConstituencyNA-130 Lahore-XIV
In office
1 June 2013 – 28 July 2017
Preceded byBilal Yasin
Succeeded byKalsoom Nawaz
ConstituencyNA-120 Lahore-III
In office
1993–1997
ConstituencyNA-95 Lahore-IV
In office
1997–1999
ConstituencyNA-95 Lahore-IV
Provincial Minister for Finance of Punjab
In office
1981–1985
Personal details
Born
Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif

(1949-12-25) 25 December 1949 (age 75)
Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Political party Pakistan Muslim League (N) (1999–present)
Other political
affiliations
Pakistan Muslim League (1976–1999)
Islami Jamhoori Ittehad (1988–1993)
Spouse
(m. 1971; died 2018)
Children4 (including Maryam Nawaz)
RelativesSee Sharif family
Alma materGovt. College University
University of the Punjab
Signature

Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif[a] (born 25 December 1949) is a Pakistani politician and businessman who served as the 12th prime minister of Pakistan for three non-consecutive terms, first serving from 1990 to 1993, then from 1997 to 1999 and later from 2013 to 2017. He is the longest-serving prime minister of Pakistan, having served a total of more than 9 years across three tenures. Each term has ended in his ousting.

Born into the upper-middle-class Sharif family in Lahore, Nawaz is the son of Muhammad Sharif, the founder of Ittefaq and Sharif groups. Nawaz studied business at Government College and law at the University of Punjab. Nawaz entered into politics in 1981, when he was appointed by President Zia as the minister of finance for the province of Punjab. Backed by a loose coalition of conservatives, Nawaz was elected as the chief minister of Punjab in 1985 and re-elected after the end of martial law in 1988.

In 1990, Nawaz led the conservative Islamic Democratic Alliance and became the 12th prime minister of Pakistan. After being ousted in 1993, when President Ghulam Ishaq Khan dissolved the National Assembly, Nawaz served as the leader of the opposition to the government of Benazir Bhutto from 1993 to 1996. He returned to the premiership after the Pakistan Muslim League (N) (PML-N) was elected in 1997, and served until his removal in 1999 by military takeover and was tried in a plane hijacking case.

After being imprisoned and later exiled for more than a decade, he returned to politics in 2011 and led his party to victory for the third time in 2013. In 2017, Nawaz was again removed from office by the Supreme Court of Pakistan following the Panama Papers case. In 2018, the Pakistani Supreme Court disqualified Nawaz from holding public office, and he was also sentenced to ten years in prison by an accountability court. In 2019, he moved to London for medical treatment on bail. He was also declared an absconder by a Pakistani court, however, the Islamabad High Court later granted him protective bail in the Avenfield and Al-Aziza cases. In 2023, after four years of exile, he returned to Pakistan and was subsequently acquitted in the Avenfield and Al-Azizia Steel Mills cases by the IHC.
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